Nom D’Guido! I eye the panel sitting before me here in Los Angeles on the eve of Christmas as I prepare my first question. I will not lie, I am intimidated.
“Early today, the Senate passed health care legislation that, with the House bill, will provide sweeping and fundamental changes to the American health care system. What are your thoughts? Snooki?”
“Well,” said the fat thighed Italian-American girl with the long, black hair. “I keep thinking about when I got hit in the face by that frat boy at the club and I was on the ground crying. What if I had lost one of my teeth, or my face had been cut? What if I lost more than one tooth? My gawd, would Obama be able to help me?”
“Michael,” I said with a tight cough. “The Republican opposition to health care reform took the shape of a fractured party almost desperate to undercut the new president’s administration. From deceits such as death panels for your grandmother and loss of existing coverage; it was an opposition completely in the face of their own constituent’s desires, yet it’s impossible defeat became their sole obsession. What will Republicans focus on now that the historic legislature has become a fait accompli?”
“I mean, all we do is, when we go out at night, is focus on girls. I’m with my boy, Paul D, and you know, we work that shit, you know. Everybody knows by now that any time I can get my shirt off, there’s a Situation, and if you want to talk about Health Care, take a look at this shit.” The mook with the big nose stands up from his chair and pulls his Ed Hardy t-shirt over his neatly trimmed guido haircut. “This is fitness. You want health care, you should come out for a workout session with me and my boy, Ronnie. You may never get abs like this, yo, but you might not be crying so much about what’s covered. And if you’ve got it working, if you’ve got a little booty… the Situation has you covered. You know what I mean?”
“Yes, yes, I see,” I say, turning to the last member of the panel. “JWoww. Women’s groups are protesting and are expected to continue efforts to expand abortion coverage in the legislation, making it one of the hot button issues with conservative Democrats, to say nothing of the religious right. How important is it that these group’s see immediate advances in abortion coverage when, in all likelihood, as we build on National Healthcare… how shall I say… these things shall come? Wouldn’t they be best advised to get through what they can and hope to do more in the future?”
Wearing a blouse cut to present maximum cleavage, the girl’s breasts cut a strange figure, almost as though they were caught in a wind tunnel, though they were most certainly surgically augmented. Her face turned solemn.
“I had my first abortion when I was seventeen. Tommy took me to the clinic and put up almost half of the $350 and I got the rest from my uncle. I got to say that, that’s not a lot of money, so my heart goes out to girls that don’t even have access to the care that I got. I don’t know… if I got pregnant tonight, and you know, who knows? That’s possible, right?” She winks at the Situation. “What would this bill do for me? I don’t know.”
“Yes, wrong question, wrong panelist. Alay… that’s all the time we have for now. Thank you for joining me here today for this round table discussion. Next week, we ring in the new year with the Jonas Brothers and America’s need for reinvesting in manufacturing and infrastructure! Joyeux Noel, bitches!”