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As Ordinary as They Wanna Be
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Tucker:
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Picking on Ordinary Americans, are you? You and Steve Brill will have a lot
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to talk about in Hell.
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A question: What is an Ordinary American? Are there criteria for membership
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in the club? (Hasn't heard of Tina Brown. Watches CBS. Thinks
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Slate
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is a blackboard surface.) I ask because I'm not sure who
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qualifies anymore, or what constitutes ordinary. I was on a trip to West Texas
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last month, and my wife, daughter, in-laws, and I stopped in Marfa, population
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2,500. Giant was shot in and around there in the mid-50s, and the main
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drag probably doesn't look much different today than it did then. We were in a
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Mexican restaurant having lunch, the sort of time-capsule place where people
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smoke freely at their tables and vegetarians like me are out of luck. I thought
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to myself: So this is the last unsullied place on earth; these are the last
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holdouts from the modern world; these are the last Ordinary Americans. And then
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we heard a dusty coot in a cowboy hat in the booth behind us talking about his
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IPO.
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It is definitely true, as you say, that politicians turn the folks they
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refer to as Ordinary Americans into props. I'm reminded of the time in late '95
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or early '96, during his belly-flop presidential bid, when Phil Gramm
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introduced Dickie Flatt to the world. Ol' Dickie, we were told, was a printer
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from Mexia, a tiny Texas town whose previous claim to fame had been that it was
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the birthplace of Anna Nicole Smith (which itself is one for the Hall of
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Dubious Distinctions). Dickie worked so hard and such long hours that his hands
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were forever stained with printer's ink--and if that didn't make Dickie Flatt
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and Ordinary Americans like him deserving of a massive tax cut, well,
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tarnation. Dickie was indeed from Mexia, but he wasn't just some printer; he
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was a longtime volunteer on Gramm's campaigns. It's not as if he was picked out
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of a rope line to play a round of Who Wants to Be a Campaign Accessory; he was
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a committed partisan duped into portraying no one in particular. When
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politicians talk about Ordinary Americans, what they really mean is: Ordinary
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Americans Who Already Agree With Me, Whose Life Stories and Lifestyles I've
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Vetted for Anything Embarrassing and Untoward, and Whose Personal Misfortune
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I'm Going To Exploit For My Own Ends Until the Election Is Over, at Which Time
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No One on My Staff Will Return Their Calls.
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That '96 race is worth recalling for another reason you mentioned: At no
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other time in the history of American politics have both halves of a
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presidential ticket referred to themselves so frequently in the third
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person.
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Dole: Hello, Jack? Jack Kemp? Bob Dole wants you to be his running mate.
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Kemp: Jack Kemp would be honored. Dole: Bob Dole thanks you. Kemp: No, Jack
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Kemp thanks you. Jack Kemp is happy to quarterback your team. Dole: Arrggggh.
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Bob Dole. Doley Bob.
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I couldn't help but work in a sports metaphor, which was the other maddening
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aspect of '96. If I had to hear one more football reference ... And it's no
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better this year. The great disappointment of the Bradley campaign has been the
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incessant use of basketball terminology by political reporters. I think it's
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lazy, empty writing at its worst, and I'm sure Ordinary Americans agree.
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Regards,
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Evan
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