Everyone’s heard of Groundhog Day, but are you familiar with Ground Weasel Day? It’s actually much more important, but it’s mostly a political insider thing. I’m going to let you in on a little secret. Don’t tell anyone else.
On Feb. 2, a groundhog named Punxsutawney Phil comes out of the ground in Punxsutawney, Pa., to see whether he sees his shadow, which allegedly tells us whether there’s going to be six more weeks of winter or not. It’s a cute little legend, but who really cares? The important action comes the next day — Feb. 3 — every four years.
On the Feb. 3 of a presidential election year, a ground weasel named Backroom Bob comes out of a smoke-filled room and turns on a television set. He flips between various cable news networks these days, but he used to have to watch the evening news. Before there was television, he read morning papers.
Regardless of the era, though, it works the same way. Backroom Bob comes out on that day to sample the candidates for president and the amount of support they have among voters. He then gives his prediction for the next four political years.
I can’t give you Backroom Bob’s specific location, because they’d kill me if I went that far. But let’s just say that he’s located in a far darker corner of reality than you might like to realize exists in your political system. He lives in the smoke-filled rooms behind a certain seedy bar frequented by especially crooked political wheeler-dealers. As a ground weasel himself, he understands other weasels and doesn’t judge them for their base motivations and vile dishonesty. All weasels are like that, so he expects it.
I’m terribly sorry to break it to you, but straw polls mean nothing
If authentic connection is absent, we crave love and a human touch
If you think world is about logic, you misunderstand human nature
Had enough yet? Ready to quit pretending politics changes things?
Reality no longer seems to matter to dysfunctional culture in denial
In a culture of cold, ‘no strings’ sex, only emotional intimacy fills needs
Check out my Tuesday interview on Steve Gelder’s political radio show
Advice to fast food restaurant execs: stop ‘innovating,’ do the basics right
VIDEO: Peaceful river reminds me we often miss the peace we crave