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July 4, 2007 American citizens will now be compelled to
allow British soldiers to live in their homes, thanks to a new signing
statement from President Bush. By negating the Third
Amendment, the new order completes the abrogation of the entire United
States Bill of Rights. High-level White House sources have indicated
that this was Bush's sole purpose in issuing the statement.
While precisely which British soldiers are to live in which homes
remains unclear, the signing statement is clear and unambiguous,
according to a press release on the White House website. The
statement, in Bush's handwriting, contains the complete text of the
Third Amendment — "No soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in
any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in
a manner to be prescribed by law" — crossed out, with the words "Hey,
Bigtime, we missed one! Bring on the redcoats!" and what appears to be
a smiley face added underneath. The new signing statement was
written into the margin of an unrelated bill blocking any recount of
votes in the massive GOP sweep of the 2006 elections, giving
Republicans a resounding majority in 53 states. Some Democrats mildly
protested the vote count in December, citing mathematical studies which
they claimed demonstrated that only 50 states had existed prior to the
election. Republicans denounced this as "math," and the question
remained unresolved for weeks. The story gained further
notoriety when bloggers in the state of North Florida found that three
days before the election, the Veterans Administration had declared the
entire black population of the state as Killed In Action in the 1944
battle of Anzio, even though several hundred Republican votes in the
state were apparently cast by manatees. Some activists have argued
that manatees, which typically inhabit warm, shallow estuaries, would
be unlikely to have reached the appropriate polling places.
However, in January, a blonde tourist from Connecticut went missing,
and the news channels dropped about the story completely.
"Bigtime" is believed to be a reference to Vice President Dick Cheney,
although Cheney was unavailable for comment. The vice president has
had an increasingly distant relationship with the press ever since
accidentally shooting twenty-six people in the face over the course of
three afternoons in October, 2006. Cheney has denied that alcohol
played a role in the incident, and all twenty-six people have
apologized to the vice president. The signing statement —
Bush's once-controversial practice of amending and interpreting laws as
he signs them, arrogating to himself the traditional roles of both the
Congress and Supreme Court — was the 1,745th of Bush's presidency.
Previous signing statements have negated the prohibition of torture,
eliminated oversight of Bush's use of the Patriot Act, and declared
"Englesh" the official language of the United States. Some
constitutional scholars claim that Bush's total number of signing
statements is actually 1,744, and that statement number 1,309 was, in
fact, an uncompleted seven-letter game of Hangman. This would be little comfort to the now-deceased residents of Balloo, Missouri.
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