by Mark McHugh
My Doctor’s an
idiot. A few years ago, he started expressing concerns about my weight,
pointing at this chart supposedly showing how much a man of my height should
weigh. One glance at his stupid chart and it was clear to me that he had
completely misdiagnosed my condition. There was nothing wrong with my
weight, I just wasn’t tall enough. Clearly I needed to
grow my way out of this. So I went home and googled “how to stimulate
growth.” Once I got past the all the baldness cures and penis pumps (it’s
not my bag, baby), I found hundreds of papers so incredibly boring I knew they
had to be true. In no time, I was able to design and implement my own
stimulus plan based on the irrefutable scientificky principles of Nobel prize
winners and other people so smart they never had to do an honest day’s work in
their lives. Despite the difficulty climbing stairs, I was feeling pretty
good about things until my last check-up….
“Hi, Doc.”
“Hi,” he said,
examining my file. He looked up, “You’ve put on twenty pounds since the
last time I saw you”
“Thanks for
noticing,” I beamed.
He frowned.
“I remember now. You’re the guy on the diet designed to make you
grow. What’s that called again?”
“The Keynesian
Plan.”
“No,” I replied,
“But I have incorporated some elements of that plan” (I don’t like vegetables).
“And how’s this
whole Keynesian thing working out?” he asked.
“I’ll admit I’m a
little disappointed. I’ve only grown and inch and a half so far, but..”
“No you haven’t,” he interrupted, pointing, “You’ve just got those stupid elevator wedges in your shoes to make you look taller.”
“No you haven’t,” he interrupted, pointing, “You’ve just got those stupid elevator wedges in your shoes to make you look taller.”
“They’re to get me
acclimated to being taller.”
“Which you’re not,”
he declared. “I told you, you’re fully grown. The only thing you’ve
succeeded in doing is collapsing you arches and giving yourself Type 2
Diabetes.”
“We Keynesians call
things like that “unintended consequences” (I used finger-quotes to let him
know it was a technical term). And trust me, Doc, I’m no happier about
them than you. Can I see that height-weight chart of yours again?”
He handed me the
chart. After a moment, I sighed, “Looks like I’ll have to do more QE.”
“What?”
“Quantitative
eating. It’s how you stimulate growth, Doc. It’s technical.”
“Oh,” he
said. “Because it sounds an awful lot like what we in the medical
profession call “stuffing your fat face” (giving me finger-quotes, but in
a condescending, not-at-all-helpful kind of way).”
I tried to stay
calm and empathize. “Doc, it’s not your fault you haven’t been educated
about Keynesian principles. They only teach it at top-notch schools like
M.I.T. and Harvard. I don’t know about you, Doc, but I feel better
knowing that no matter what happens on election day, the White House will be occupied
by someone who attended Harvard.”
“As did the
Unabomber,” he added.
“Still better than
the bumblefuck medical school you went to!” I snapped.
“Johns Hopkins?” he
queried, thrusting his eyebrows up.
“John Hopkins.” I
corrected (Friggin’ Idiot!)
“Tell me, how are
you paying for all this stimulus?”
“Food Stamps…and my
ex-wife’s credit card.” (I just knew he wasn’t going to understand this
part…)
He looked at me
with a curious mixture of confusion and utter disgust. “What….Does she
even know?”
“I’m no Dr.
Bernanke, but I know one of the most important aspects of Keynesian stimulus is
sticking someone else with the bill. It works out better for everyone if the
victim, er , stimulus provider is unaware. She’ll be OK. I’m going
to make it all up to her.”
“Really?
How?”
“Look at your damn
chart, Doc!” I bellowed. “I’m going to be taller than Shaq when all
this stimulus kicks in! Can you say NBA contract?“
“No,” he said,
unimpressed, “just over-sized casket.”
(I could tell he
was about to launch into another one of his “austerity” sermons. You
know, “Consume less, do more, stop spending other people’s money,
blah-blah-blah.” Pinhead. Obviously Dr. Quackenstein was beyond all
hope.)
“No offense Doc,
but I need help from people with a better understanding of these things.
Any chance you can refer me to the Mayo clinic?”
“Is that where the
treat illness with mayonnaise?”
“Yes,” I said.
“No,” he said, and
walked out.
As I sat down to
rest in the lobby on the way back to my car, I remembered that the key
ingredient to the Keynesian system is confidence and realized that what I was
feeling, beside the tingling sensation in my left arm, was nothing more than
the sting of rejection felt by true visionaries like Jon Corzine and the
Octomom.
So if anyone asks,
I’m at the grocery store.
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