There's something funny
about this war, and that's a good thing.
According to Reuters, comedians around the world are telling jokes about
Saddam, President Bush and many other war-related items. But nobody
does humor as well as Americans.
Jay Leno: "In California, 50 women protested the impending war with Iraq
by lying on the ground naked and spelling out the word peace. Right idea,
wrong president."
Conan O'Brien: "Saddam Hussein has agreed to let UN weapons inspectors
in Iraq. But he also said under no circumstances will Geraldo be let back
in the country."
David Letterman: "They're trying to get that crazy guy Saddam Hussein
into exile. So far, the only offer he has is two weeks on Sean Penn's
couch."
A brief examination of these lines is telling. Poking fun at our "leaders"
past and present reflects how confident we are in our right to say as
we please. Poking fun at our "journalists" reflects our distrust of the
people who are supposed to expose corruption and protect our freedoms.
And poking fun at the useful idiots in Hollywood reveals our own disgust
with the lunacy our incredible wealth has enabled.
I have to admit that I'm partial to Letterman, who, ever since 911 has
had his finger on the pulse of American common sense. This one is a beauty:
"More information is coming out on Saddam Hussein. We now know that he
has 24 presidential palaces. Each palace has a dolphin pool and an amusement
park. Well, if you didn't think this guy was creepy before... now he's
starting to sound like Michael Jackson."
Jon Stewart is equally brilliant. This line exposes the messiness of American
foreign policy:
"What will happen after Saddam is gone? Democracy seems unlikely, so the
hope is that he'll be replaced by a more pliable leader, someone we can
work with to keep the country under control and maintain regional balance
of power. Someone sympathetic, secular, someone like, oh...1982 Saddam."
Leno's jokes tend to be pedestrian and off the mark, but just as frequently
he stumbles into the truth. This one cause one to reflect on our ambitious
idealism:
"President Bush said it's now time for a change in Iraq and he wants them
to have a Western-style democracy like ours. So right now in Iraq, the
economy is collapsing, businessmen are corrupt, and Hussein wants his
son to take over as president. Sounds like mission accomplished."
One of the best threads to come out of this war, though, has focused on
Geraldo. He represents everything we at once hate and admire in America:
celebrity, self-interest and arrogance. Conan nails him with this
one:
"The Pentagon is trying to kick Geraldo Rivera out of Iraq because he
revealed sensitive military information. Yeah, if Geraldo is kicked out
this means that Saddam Hussein will once again be the most hated man in
Iraq."
Comedians in other countries are attempting humor, as well. In Germany,
Harald Schmidt says that "Bush is going to have to finish this war himself
-- he doesn't have a son who can do it for him later."
Ha, ha. Hey, Schmidt, we Americans prefer funnier jokes, such as this
one from Leno:
"Germany is now saying that they won't go along with an invasion of Iraq.
However, they did say they would go along if the invasion included Poland,
France and Belgium."
In France, one editorial cartoonist depicts a U.S. soldier stepping onto
a lunar landscape with the caption: "It's one small step for man ... one
giant step for stupidity."
Hey, Pierre, credible people might argue against this war, but we don't
want to hear it from the French. We prefer this Letterman joke instead:
"A lot of folks are still demanding more evidence before they actually
consider Iraq a threat. For example, France wants more evidence. And you
know I'm thinking, the last time France wanted more evidence they rolled
right through Paris with the German flag."
In any event, some might say comedy should be toned down while the pain
and suffering of war is going on. But the truth is, good satire
is better at making sense of this war that any journalists have. Laughter
is a way of coping with pain, and where there is laughter there is health.
And I hope this war is over soon so Iraqi comedians can start making fun
of their own government.