Headless Turkeys

What became of those heads? I assume we are not breeding headless turkeys, although almost no one really knows what goes on inside poultry farms. The farmers don’t talk and the turkeys can’t talk. It’s an ideal set-up for a conspiracy.

Let’s say, for example, that the government is breeding zombies as part of a biological warfare program. How will they keep these zombies alive while they are not active in the field? This calls for a large quantity of brain matter.

What animals arrive annually at the end of November — always conspicuously missing their heads?

The headless turkey. Coincidence? Or something far more sinister?

Another Amendment!

The Cremation Amendment will be a good start, but we still need to prepare. Preparedness — because those zombies aren’t going to kill themselves. We need at least one more amendment.

It occurs to me that allowing Congress to approve the Secretary of Zombie Affairs, as is commonly the case with presidential appointments, creates a possible problem that needs to be formally addressed. Just as we once created an amendment to allow the President to move the site of the U.S. government in an emergency, I believe we will need an amendment allowing for immediate appointment of a Secretary of Zombie Affairs. In fact, that whole congressional approval requirement may need to be amended to allow for emergency appointments during apocalyptic times. If zombies eat the Secretary of State, we can’t sit around waiting for enough members of Congress to battle their way through the streets to begin arguing about the next appointment.

The Emergency Presidential Appointment Amendment obviously ought to be approved as quickly as possible. We can’t wait around like we have with the electoral college for the next Al Gore. There should always be a few working brains in the U.S. government.

Cremation for All

A harmless museum in Europe somewhere? Or a repository for the undead? At what point do the dead cease to be dead? I don’t know and neither do you.

We need an amendment requiring cremation of all the dead. Just to kill (and cremate) two birds with one stone, we might link this to an amendment eliminating the electoral college, requiring that the U.S. Presidential candidate with the most votes be the automatic winner. The President will naturally nominate the Secretary of Zombie Affairs.

Food for Thought

The preceding translation ought to give us pause. If rendered correctly, we again must face the possibility that our zombie model has been overly simplified. This zombie is planning. This zombie shows problem-solving skills, like the raptors turning doorknobs in Jurassic Park.

On the other hand, the zombie’s comments also suggest a solution to a problem that no doubt many of us have been curious about. After we lock Uncle Sid or Cousin Thug Wannabe in the shed, how do we feed them? Clearly we don’t want to unchain the shed door.

Mice and rats seem the obvious solution to our problems. Reptile owners across the United States have been feeding mice to their pets forever. All you need to do is drill a little hole in the shed wall.

Actual Picture of the Zombie Virus!

This picture was taken in the early stages of replication with an electron microscope. Since the actual incubation period for zombification is anywhere from a few days to three weeks, we cannot know the status of the unfortunate host who has contracted this virus. 

Or could this actually be a distant galaxy taken by the Hubble Telescope? A crystal resting on black velvet in Austria? That’s one problem with science as we know it nowadays. When astronomers first discovered that the sun was in the center of the solar system, they were able to present their proofs and fellow scientists were in position to check those findings.

But when we see a picture taken with an electron microscope, we end up taking a lot on faith. Suppose the above paragraph had allegedly been written by James Smith, M.D. How would you know if James Smith existed? I’m sure he does. It would be nightmarish tracking this fellow through cyberspace, I imagine. How do we identify reliable sources of information?

Like the problem of the water fountains (if you go way back in the blog, the technomagic of the times was attacked previously — I may address important topics more than once) this question of reliable information needs to come more front and center in our consciousness. We rely on the internet and televised news, in particular, without always vetting the information coming our way. I’ve strayed into the serious here, which I mostly avoid. But as I listen to the information on Benghazi, I naturally stray to the issue of zombies. If the zombies started to take over downtown Portland, and the government dropped the ball (or simply got blindsided), would you be able to rely on subsequent reports about Portland? What do YOU think?

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