Congress and the Clinton administration have recently contemplated (if it can be said that either has ever contemplated anything) a proposal to set national educational standards, then test all fourth graders for reading ability and all eighth graders for math skills.
One question that has so far gone unasked is this: what qualifies politicians even to *discuss* standards, let alone impose them upon others? Given the standards of most politicians for ethics, personal hygiene, and relevance to the real world, we're not sure we want them setting standards for anyone else.
Nevertheless, and much to our surprise, the Beltway Bullies have accidentally hit upon a good idea this time -- just not in quite the way they intended. If they believe it is important to test school children, think how much more vital it is that we test our would-be rulers -- those selfsame congresspeople and administrators -- for some minimum level of knowledge and skill.
Herewith we present:
THE SACREDBULL BASIC ENGLISH AND MATH TEST FOR FEDERAL POLITICIANS
SECTION I: Competency in English
1. The phrase, "Congress shall make no law..." means
a. Congress shall make no law...
b. Congress shall make some laws...
c. Americans can do anything they want, except things my colleagues and
I, or our largest contributors, personally dislike.
d. Congress can do anything it damn well pleases, starting with stacking
the courts with our toadies.
2. What is the correct interpretation of the phrase "...the right
of the people...shall not be infringed"?
a. The right of the people...shall not be infringed.
b. The right of the people...shall be infringed, but only gradually, moderately
and for the good of children and battered women (except the ones we batter).
c. The right of the people is actually a state's right and the states are
a bunch of wusses who'll put up with anything as long as we offer them
enough tax-funded loot in return for selling out their citizens.
d. The people are all sitting on their butts watching TV, so we can infringe
any damn thing we feel like infringing, and we'll get the media to screw
you if you think otherwise.
3. What is the meaning of the phrase, "The powers ... are reserved
to the states, or to the people..."
a. The powers...are reserved to the states, or to the people...
b. The interstate commerce clause gives us the authority to do anything.
Therefore there are no other powers left to reserve for those other twits.
Too bad for them.
c. Where'd you get a stupid idea like that? We're more powerful and have
bigger guns than they do, and that's all that really matters, isn't it?
d. Hahahahahahahahahaha!
4. Essay Question: Write a bill (a proposed law, you twit) in plain English, for once. We just want to see if you can do it. Extra credit if it's constitutional or can be read and understood in less than ten minutes by a high school student of average intelligence.
SECTION II: Competency in Mathematics
1. A fugitive oil baron named Roger gives $300,000 to the Democratic
National Committee for the specific purpose of gaining "access"
to the president. For that, he is given six invitations to the White House,
but does not get the pipeline he wanted. How much money should Roger give
to the DNC next time?
a. Nothing. People shouldn't be able to bribe their way into the presence
of public officials.
b. This is a trick question. Next time, a Republican president might be
in office, and Roger should give his money to the RNC, instead.
c. I know the president. If Roger gives me the money, I'll give Roger access.
Heck, I'll even throw in some hot babes, since Roger said the babes at
the White House were too busy stroking Clinton to pay any attention to
him.
d. $600,000. (Roger's answer, in testimony before Congress 9/18/97.)
2. According to the administration's own projections, Americans will
soon face an 82 percent income tax rate if present entitlement programs
and levels of federal growth persist. How many years before American citizens
rise up in rebellion?
a. Americans should never be driven to that kind of desperation. We should
immediately begin rolling the federal government back to constitutional
levels.
b. Don't worry, we're going to reform the tax system and, as Rep. Mitch
McConnell says, "virtually abolish the IRS as we know it"; we'll
just have an 82 percent national sales tax, instead.
c. As soon as my term in office is over and I can get an oceanside place
in Costa Rica, complete with Uzi-toting bodyguards.
d. What do we care? We'll just let Janet burn the little jerks and claim
they committed suicide.
3. The federal budget is...oh...some great big figure in the gazillions.
The national debt is probably about five trillion dollars, give or take.
The annual deficit is, you know, billions and billions and billions (not
counting off-budget stuff like Amtrak and the Post Office). Budgets for
Social Security and Medicare are increasing at some really wowie-zow of
a percent every year. (Not like you care what the actual figures are, anyway.)
Congress and the president have just cooked up a tax cut package filled
with goodies for favored special interests. Please explain how you can
claim the budget will be balanced by 2002.
a. We can't do it without extreme cutbacks in government. Anybody who says
we can is lying like a congressman.
b. Revenues will...uh...yeah...revenues will increase because of all those
tax breaks and...uh...the economy will be just perfect forever and ever
and...uh...maybe some plague or something will come along and kill off
all those money-sucking old folks...or something like that, maybe.
c. The media said it's true, didn't they? What more proof do you want?
d. Hey, that's for the suckers who are here in 2002 to figure out. I'll
be in Costa Rica by then.
e. Well, actually, now that I think about it, I'll be in some other country
with an army so they can fight off the U.S. troops who will be sent to
take my loot like they did Noriega's. Like, hey, I stole mine fair and
square!
Correct answers: B, C, D and E (From the politicians' point of view, that is. Hey, you know, whatever we can get away with while the folks are watching TV...)
Correct answer, in reality: L-E-A-D T-H-E-R-A-P-Y
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