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Independence Day has to be taken seriously

July 4, 2015

It can’t be. You’re not ready, but it is the Fourth of July. It seems like just yesterday you were putting on your winter coat and boots. Actually it probably was if you live in places like Fargo, North Dakota.

But lately on the Fourth of July, or Independence Day, you hear a lot about people’s rights. With images of people face down on the pavement in handcuffs and high-profile trials being televised around the clock with a horde of legal experts who specialize in interrupting each other, the idea that someone else is infringing on your territory seems to be in the forefront of the national news.

Everyone is lending an opinion as to your rights, which is why we broke away from the British. They couldn’t understand that we have the right to wear white after Labor Day, we have the right to tailgate the car ahead of us if it has an Obama/Biden bumper sticker, we have the right to throw up when a new reality show is announced by the television geniuses. Those people who gave you single men and women proposing to strangers they’ve only known in front of a camera.

Fortunately for us, our forefathers had the vision to write all of this in the Constitution and then get the heck out of Dodge.

Life was simpler years ago, and so was the interpretation of the Constitution. Your rights were answered quite easily with three choices. No. 1 being, “Because I’m your father.” No. 2, “Because I’m your mother.” And No. 3, which I like personally, “Because I said so.”

And this affects our everyday life even in the most basic of scenarios.

You take a guy who isn’t exactly known for his expertise around the house. He’s not sure where the dishwasher, washer, dryer and furnace are located or even if there is a backyard. And yet, after being inundated with nonstop fix-it tool commercials, which sometimes are confused with medical plumbing issues, he feels the need to act. By gum, it is his right to go to the local home improvement center and wander around like he knows something.

Now if he could just remember how to program his GPS to find it, everything will be all set. He’s thinking, I better exercise my right to fix that hole in the side of the house that squirrels have been using all year to go in and out.

In fact, they’ve made so many trips, they qualified for their own E-Z Pass. According to a lawyer on television, who posed in front of a Porta-Potty, which was all that was left of some poor sucker’s home, that right could be taken away from you.

This guy has a box of tools he’s had from the 1950s in a suitcase under a tarp in the basement thereby causing the need to go out and buy stuff that will eventually result in taking down the house into a pile of sticks and kindling, which will happen as soon as he climbs the ladder and pounds a nail into the siding.

Yeah, this will be fixed as soon as Elvis shows up. But hey, a guy has a right.

The squirrels will disappear very quickly, which was the whole point of the exercise. Squirrels have rights too.

First they have to stop holding their sides and gasping for air, which comes about when they are laughing so hard they go into laryrngo-spasms.

And then they have to change out of wet pants into dry fur, and that needs no explanation.

Now I’m not picking on men; we women also think we have a lot of rights. For example, women have the right to put on mascara at a stop sign, while backhanding an unruly mob of kids, well mostly their own, who are mooning other drivers after their Little Tykes sports event.

It’s in the Constitution, and it takes quite a bit of manual dexterity.

Independence Day is not to be taken lightly. And neither is the philosophical argument, “Because I said so.”

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