Dateline: CANNABISTOWN, PO—In Potlandia, marijuana is legal for
recreational purposes and is commonly smoked by nearly all of the adult
citizens of that country, while alcohol and nicotine are banned. But the
alcohol and tobacco industries regard Potlandia’s laws as discriminatory.
“We think it’s absurd for nicotine cigarettes to be illegal
in a place where marijuana cigarettes are legal,” says the tobacco lobbyist,
Deborah Lotsofgall. “I mean, what’s the difference between the two? How can
anyone respect the law when it’s so glaringly inconsistent?”
But most citizens of Potlandia defend their laws. “The drugs
aren’t the same at all, man,” says Sunny Moonwind, wearing a tie-died shirt,
bandana around her forehead, and bare feet. “Like, marijuana gets you high, not
low, you know what I mean? It’s like, the blessed weed kicks your ego to the
curb so your spirit can rejoice. But nicotine just makes you a more
close-minded worker bee, man. It makes you a slave to the machine. And who
wants to be a slave when you can be free?”
Matthew Wino, a lobbyist for the alcohol industry, practices
civil disobedience in Cannabistown, the capital of Potlandia. He stands on the
street corner offering free shots of Jagermeister and shouting, “Don’t you
people want to lose your inhibitions and have some harmless fun? You know, hook
up with a stranger, forget your troubles, buy things you see on TV, and make
your crazy country more economically competitive?”
Few Potlandians take up Mr. Wino’s offer. Doctor Morris
Pothead explains the difference between the drugs. “The thing is, nicotine and
alcohol are capitalistic drugs, engineered to dehumanize the users, whereas cannabis
is a natural entheogen, which means it’s a drug that gives you religious
experiences. Nicotine is a stimulant and a relaxant. When you smoke it, you
become both relaxed and sharp, which makes you a more productive worker. That’s
why nicotine is legal in hyper-capitalistic countries: it’s good for the
economy—even if it’s terrible for the people’s spiritual well-being.
“And alcohol is a party drug that puts you in a fantasy world
so you forget how capitalism exacerbates the ego, ultimately making the drinker
more selfish, pleasure-seeking, and materialistic, because it clouds her
judgment so she loses sight of the big picture. It distracts the users with
parties and one-night stands and fake confidence which helps them outcompete
each other, so they forget that we’re all in this together.”
Every Saturday, Potlandians have a concert reminiscent of
Woodstock in which they smoke a lot of pot and celebrate visionary art, have
lots of sex and explore the outer reaches of human consciousness.
But Ms. Lotsofgall isn’t impressed. “Just look at these
freaks!” she says, shrugging off a hippie who had offered her a joint. “They’re
flaky do-nothings. Don’t they know they should be working non-stop with hardly
any vacation time, like in the US? That’s the meaning of life. You’re supposed
to work hard all day long for a very low wage that rarely increases, so your
bosses can enrich themselves at your expense. That’s how the real world works,
the world of bogus economic models and Nazi-inspired social Darwinian
prejudices and out-of-control egoism that makes people so cruel and
angst-ridden, they either shoot little kids with machine guns or don’t revolt
against their society when something so evil happens in their midst.”
Tom Travesty, an American Evangelical Christian, criticizes
the spirituality of Potlandians. “We’re supposed to be religious, not
spiritual,” he says. “Only perfect beings like Jesus and the angels are fit to
be spiritual. We’re fallen creatures, so we’re supposed to be colossal
hypocrites. That’s why when I can be bothered to read a passage from the Bible,
I make sure to do the exact opposite of what it says. The more I care only
about my narrow-minded happiness on Earth and let everything else go to hell,
the more likely God will look down at his Creation and say to himself, ‘Well
now, what I’ve wrought has been so thoroughly corrupted that I’d better get off
my high horse, put all my spiritual perfection to work, and clean up that
mess.’
“But no, these potheads think they can improve the world by
themselves, just by not being so greedy, by caring more about original ideas
than about owning lots of mass-produced things they don’t need, and by trying
to live in environmentally-friendly ways instead of burying their head in the
sand. These hippies think their religion’s better than ours just because they
have actual religious experiences on a daily basis, while we American
Christians are busy selling out Jesus, that hippie.
“My advice to these wacko Potlandians: outlaw marijuana,
start smoking nicotine and drinking alcohol, and help the rest of us destroy
the planet so God will be forced to intervene.”
Im so glad you posted this. Its very fun.
ReplyDeleteDude, you get everything right about humor except the thing about making people laugh. Go back to the penetrating philosophical commentary. Not everyone can do humor. It doesn't make you less valuable as a person. Dude, please.
ReplyDeleteI agree that many of these satirical articles aren't laugh-out-loud funny. Don't forget, though, they're meant to be satirical, not broadly humorous. As I see it, satires work also if they make you angry rather than laugh. The Daily Show rarely makes me laugh out loud, but it often makes me angry at the political targets that they ridicule. I suspect I'm better at riling folks up as opposed to making them laugh. Still, I'd like to keep trying to get better at this sort of writing. I'm still writing the long articles as well and you can choose to read whatever you want.
DeleteGood work…unique site and interesting too… keep it up…looking forward for more updates..
ReplyDeletesmoking marijuana.