I always thought it was funny how so many politicians publish memoirs after they leave office. I mean, what kind of word is “memoir” anyway? And why do it all? If you’ve done something worth writing about everyone knows about it already. And these days anything a politician includes in their memoirs has already been dissected by the media and laid bare before the public microscope.
My biggest beef with political memoirs, though, is that they’re just so cliché.
I’ve been told that for an elected official I have a profound dislike for clichés. Political life is full of baby kissing, firm handshaking, “Stay the course!” garbage. It only gets worse when you’re the president. I never understood how bad they could be until the war with our nearest neighbor, the English.
Elisabeth had been a good friend and it was an agonizing decision to invade. But the only deposits of saltpeter on the continent were in England and we had to have them.
And so a war referred to in the history books as “The War of English Aggression” began. The English history books would call it “The Surprise German Invasion War” and that would actually be a more honest title. But there aren’t any more English history books, or English, and so the point is moot.
During the war my speechwriting team practically bathed the public in clichés. We would “See this conflict through” and we would “Strive for victory.” At state fairs I urged people to “Fight the good fight.” In the cities I told the gathered workers that “Together, we will win this fight.” I said all that and more, and all with a winning smile, or with grim determination, or with any of a dozen other expressions I could call upon with little effort.
I hated every moment of it. I hated the clichés, the insincerity, and the mindless doublespeak that crowds eat up and journalists tear into ruthlessly.
I especially hated the war. What we did to the English was reprehensible, but I was so determined to forge Germany into a world power that I overlooked my desire to do so peacefully.
In the years following the war I did everything I could to ensure Germany’s domination without resorting to armed conflict. No more war, no more clichés ladled onto an adoring audience, and no more rampant insincerity. Not from me, not from my office. I could get back to the business of running the nation and actually getting some work prepared.
You know, I almost made it.
The innocuous downfall of my ideals began at a gathering of Germany’s scientific community in a former English city now known as Bismarckia. (Not my idea, and talk about a cliché).
The sciences were a huge part of my election platform. Let’s see how much of that old speech I can remember. “The flow of new ideas in a free and open environment can do nothing but benefit every German citizen. The nation that leads its neighbors in technology will stand astride the world like a colossus!”
Yes, I know that’s a cliché and no, I’m not proud of it. I cribbed that colossus line from a former German military advisor. Hey, it got me elected.
This particular year the science folk were all agog over something called “refining.” It’s not just anyone who can get excited about black goop from the ground but those guys were pretty crazy about it. I listened carefully and was soon caught up in the excitement too. I was filled with thoughts of an invincible military, one that could repel any and all invaders. I thought of the industrial might our country could achieve. I realized then a discovery of this magnitude was the only way for Germany to maintain a global lead.
It all came down to the oil. All we had to do was dig for it.
“Show me where it is,” I said.
My biggest beef with political memoirs, though, is that they’re just so cliché.
I’ve been told that for an elected official I have a profound dislike for clichés. Political life is full of baby kissing, firm handshaking, “Stay the course!” garbage. It only gets worse when you’re the president. I never understood how bad they could be until the war with our nearest neighbor, the English.
Elisabeth had been a good friend and it was an agonizing decision to invade. But the only deposits of saltpeter on the continent were in England and we had to have them.
And so a war referred to in the history books as “The War of English Aggression” began. The English history books would call it “The Surprise German Invasion War” and that would actually be a more honest title. But there aren’t any more English history books, or English, and so the point is moot.
During the war my speechwriting team practically bathed the public in clichés. We would “See this conflict through” and we would “Strive for victory.” At state fairs I urged people to “Fight the good fight.” In the cities I told the gathered workers that “Together, we will win this fight.” I said all that and more, and all with a winning smile, or with grim determination, or with any of a dozen other expressions I could call upon with little effort.
I hated every moment of it. I hated the clichés, the insincerity, and the mindless doublespeak that crowds eat up and journalists tear into ruthlessly.
I especially hated the war. What we did to the English was reprehensible, but I was so determined to forge Germany into a world power that I overlooked my desire to do so peacefully.
In the years following the war I did everything I could to ensure Germany’s domination without resorting to armed conflict. No more war, no more clichés ladled onto an adoring audience, and no more rampant insincerity. Not from me, not from my office. I could get back to the business of running the nation and actually getting some work prepared.
You know, I almost made it.
The innocuous downfall of my ideals began at a gathering of Germany’s scientific community in a former English city now known as Bismarckia. (Not my idea, and talk about a cliché).
The sciences were a huge part of my election platform. Let’s see how much of that old speech I can remember. “The flow of new ideas in a free and open environment can do nothing but benefit every German citizen. The nation that leads its neighbors in technology will stand astride the world like a colossus!”
Yes, I know that’s a cliché and no, I’m not proud of it. I cribbed that colossus line from a former German military advisor. Hey, it got me elected.
This particular year the science folk were all agog over something called “refining.” It’s not just anyone who can get excited about black goop from the ground but those guys were pretty crazy about it. I listened carefully and was soon caught up in the excitement too. I was filled with thoughts of an invincible military, one that could repel any and all invaders. I thought of the industrial might our country could achieve. I realized then a discovery of this magnitude was the only way for Germany to maintain a global lead.
It all came down to the oil. All we had to do was dig for it.
“Show me where it is,” I said.
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