New Theory On Republican Candidate’s Peculiarities Draws
Interest, Scorn, Yawns From Candidate
Washington (AP) He was once a neurosurgeon. Now he is
running for the Republican nomination to vie for the presidency. He also has a
tendency to drone on and on, and to sometimes come across as if he’s dozing. An
unlikely candidate to say the least, Ben Carson has been suggested in some
circles to also be, among other things, certifiably insane. His many remarks on
a wealth of subjects suggest that the lights aren’t all on at home, so to
speak. Carson suggested that the pyramids were built by Joseph to store grain.
He’s put forward the notion that things wouldn’t have been as devastating
during the Holocaust if only people in Nazi Germany had been armed.
He’s told tall tales about his history with violent people.
Carson has advocated that people should gang up on gunmen in active shooter
matters. He’s been stumped on the matter of Cuban immigration. His historical
take on the Declaration of Independence, the issue of slavery being as bad as
Obamacare, and D-Day have been met by eye rolls and sighs of dismay. His
attitudes towards transgender people, gay people, Muslims, the Supreme Court,
and calling certain segments of the population stupid have made onlookers
wonder... is he crazy? Stupid? Did he do a lobotomy on himself?
Now a new theory is making the rounds. Albert Perkins is a doctor
at Johns Hopkins, specializing in sleep disorders. He has never met the
candidate, but has made a suggestion based on his work with other patients.
“Some patients have a disrupted sleep cycle,” he explained. “They have what we
would term micro-sleeps. They close their eyes for ten to thirty seconds, and
in that time, they’re asleep. Then they wake up and blurt out something really
strange. I mean batshit crazy strange. Come to think of it, I’m a doctor, so I
should be using something more clinical than batshit crazy.”
Perkins went on. “I’ve seen patients come out of these
micro-sleeps, people who are otherwise completely rational, and blurt out
things like ‘lizard people run Con Edison’ or ‘sideways is upside down to the
fifth dimension’. These are things that sound like complete nonsense, right?
And yet these people are by and large perfectly sane and rational. They just
blurt these things out after a micro-sleep. Now think about it. Our dreams are
where our minds run wild and where the rules get thrown out the window. When we
dream, our imaginations are set loose, and sometimes that imagination will not
be rational.” He shrugged at this point.
“My current working theory is that people falling into
micro-sleep end up in a dream state. Yes, it’s for mere seconds, but their
emergence from it is just as sudden as falling into it. Therefore their minds
are still caught up in the aspects of that dream upon waking. And feeling
foolish about saying something nonsensical, they rather not address the issue
with others. This is my theory with Mr. Carson. I know, I should be calling
him Doctor Carson, but between me, you, and your readers, the man’s totally
unfit for public office, let alone a medical practice, sleep disorder or not.”
“It’s an interesting theory,” psychologist Rachel Ellison
concedes. The esteemed Boston therapist has not sat down with the candidate,
but has her own feeling on the issue. “Sleep disorders or not, though, I would
have to say he’s insane. I mean, honestly, he doesn’t have the sheepish look of
someone who knows he’s said something nonsensical and hopes no one was paying
attention. He looks, every single time when he says these things, like he
believes it. I mean, honestly, have you ever seen the Great Pyramids of Egypt?
Storing grain? How can a rational human being even suggest that? What’s
he going to come up with next?”
The candidate himself sighed with dismay when asked if he
has any sleep disorders. Then he closed his eyes for a time. “You know,” Carson
told reporters in that droning, boring, barely audible tone of his. “This is rubbish. A smear campaign. This is
just a liberal attempt to discredit me from serving in the capacity that I
was.... that I was...” He closed his eyes again. No one said a word. Reporters
looked at each other, wondering if Carson was asleep. This reporter wondered if
his boring droning voice would end up putting world leaders to sleep during a
speech to the UN General Assembly. Not that it would get that far- Ben Carson,
after all, will never win the White House.
Finally after twenty seconds, Carson’s head rose up suddenly
and his eyes opened. He blurted out, “Devil’s Tower was the scratching post for
Daniel’s lions!”
A collective groan of exasperation rose up from the
reporters. “You can’t be serious,” a Reuters correspondent told him.
Carson looked confused. “Serious about what? What did I
say?”
An aide ushered Carson off stage, with the candidate
yelling, “What you all need to know is if we all gang up on Bigfoot, he can’t
run away and we can finally get a good photo of him!”
With that, Carson was gone. Reporters talked it all over,
placing bets on how long it would take before Carson would say yet another
stupid nonsensical thing.* Sleep disorder, insanity, or just plain old
fashioned stupidity, one thing was clear: Ben Carson is unfit for office. One
must wonder how he ever pulled off being a neurosurgeon.
*As it turns out, last night in a speech to Iowa
Republicans, Carson mused that Noah’s Ark is hidden in a cave in France. “They claim
they sealed it off to protect some thirty thousand year old cave paintings from
exposure to human interference, but that’s nonsense,” Carson told loyal supporters. “After
all, we all know the world’s no older than six or seven thousand years old.”