BREAKING: Mitt Romney Debating Under The Influence!

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Institute for Honesty in Political Discourse has announced that they have received evidence that Republican candidate for President of the United States was under the influence of performance-enhancing drug, caffeine, during Wednesday night’s debate.

The Institute, a watchdog group created soon after members of the public were shocked by the sheer amateurish nature of Secretary of State Colin Powell’s presentation of satellite images of alleged Iraqi WMD bases, has announced that it has intelligence from a source inside the Romney campaign that former Governor Mitt Romney consumed “three to five” beverages containing espresso.

“We do not break this news lightly,” said the spokeswoman for the organization, Jessica Chalmers. “We know the implications of imbibing caffeine, not only on an individual level, but what it means for American political discourse.”

“Further,” she continued, “our source has confirmed that Governor Romney began utilizing caffeine during the Republican primary elections.”

The Institute primarily fact-checks political discourse, but will occasionally push politicians to be open about their private actions. One such controversial point in their history came in their involvement in the Representative Anthony Weiner Twitter debacle.

The Institute utilized a combination of evidence and guilt-laden recordings of Weiner’s mother to push the Congressman to admit his wrongdoing, a tactic that embroiled the organization in controversy.

Since then, the Institute has been largely silent, posting updates on claims made by politicians on its website, and little else.

However, with this latest announcement, the Institute has been thrust in the spotlight. Its president – Landon Jones, a former computer programmer from Amherst, Massachusetts – appeared on Anderson Cooper 360 to speak about the Institute’s past, its partisan relations, and where he wants to take it.

“We are not affiliated with either party,” he said. “That should be clear.”

Jones then brought the focus back to the Romney issue. “What we have here is a clear example of a politician utilizing drugs to gain the upper hand against his opponent. We at the Institute want to know: What sort of precedent does this set?”

Though the country has been sent into a whirl of speculation over the allegations, there is a history of caffeine in politics.

It has been said that Abraham Lincoln drank “copious amounts” of coffee while drafting the Gettysburg Address.

Theodore Roosevelt was a rumored coffee-fiend, as well; the assassination attempt on his life rumored as having been funded by a coffee roaster whose business was shunned by the president.

And, at the root of it all, the Boston Tea Party, the singlemost important event that brought America from the tea-drinking world to the coffee-drinking sphere of influence.

Political precedent aside, caffeine has become a mark of shame, an indicator that a politician cannot hold his or her own.

“Governor Romney has never – I repeat, never – utilized caffeine on the campaign trail,” said Romney campaign spokeswoman, Andrea Saul. “He comes from a strict Mormon upbringing, and to use caffeine would be tantamount to blasphemy.”

The candidate himself spoke out: “My track record of success in both business and politics is founded on a natural work ethic. Caffeine is a tool of the sheep-like mass of humanity who want nothing more than to be coddled by the government.”

Allegations that President Obama’s bedraggled appearance was a result of caffeine withdrawals have so far been met with silence from the campaign.

Carthago Delenda Est

When Rome, Tennessee’s high school had its Spirit Week, the Principal, and Mayor of the town, Carl Olds, ended every speech with, “Furthermore, I urge you all to realize that Carthage must be destroyed.”

The student body, too obsessed with figuring out how they were going to offend their teachers with costumes for the week, did not pay any attention. In fact, no one but the History teacher, Mr. Landon Dale, paid any attention to it.

Even for Mr. Dale, the wording was nothing more than something that made a tiny bell ring in the back of his mind. One day after school, he relaxed in his apartment, and flipped open his laptop and searched for “Carthage must be destroyed.” The results pointed him to a Wikipedia article, he read it, and thought, “Well, that’s odd.”

It then occurred to him that RHS’s homecoming week football game was against Carthage High School, a few miles down the highway in Carthage, Tennessee. Still, Mr. Dale knew that Principal Olds was sort of an odd man, and chalked it up to nothing more than his eccentricity.

How wrong he was.

*

No one outside of Olds and the JROTC instructor – a man who was a part of some unheard-of paramilitary cult called The Battalion of the Holy – Lieutenant Bill Wilkinson knew anything until the JROTC – armed with rifles and Wilkinson at its head – marched into the auditorium one day as the Principal called an emergency assembly.

The Principal, in his characteristic white suit, black, horned-rimmed glasses, and rim of white hair, nodded at the Lieutenant. JROTC then locked the doors, took up guarding positions, and Wilkinson marched up to the stage, taking up post at the right side of the principal. “Rome High School,” Olds said, his voice booming through the microphone and through the speakers, “do you know what this week is?”

“Spirit Week!” shouted the football team.

“It is,” confirmed Olds. “And what do you know of our namesake? Glorious, mighty Rome?”

There was a silence in the auditorium that teachers would recognize. It’s that silence that comes when students have no idea what an instructor just asked, even though the subject matter was discussed not three minutes ago. One solitary student, a girl much too old to be in high school, but who never seemed to finish on account of several pregnancies, raised her hand. “There was that movie what had Russell Crowe in it.”

“Yes,” Olds said, the corners of his mouth drooping. “But—”

“I think he’s hot even though my daddy says he’s foreign folk and a lib’rul faggit besides.”

“That’s great.”

“But I don’t care. I fucked people before. I reckon I can fuck him straight.”

Olds sighed and nodded to Wilkinson, who nodded to a JROTC cadet, who then calmly walked over to the girl and hit her upside the head with the butt of his rifle. There was a general commotion in the auditorium – as one would expect – that went on for a few minutes. It consisted of many students trying to rush the door, realizing that JROTC had barricaded it, and then looking back at the stage in fear. Teachers shouted for order, and for explanations, but Olds shook his head in disappointment.

Wilkinson, being a more proactive sort, took out his sidearm – a Colt .45 – and fired two shots into the air.

The auditorium quieted down.

“My friends. Romans. Citizens. Lend me your ears.”

All at once, everything clicked in Mr. Dale’s mind. “Shit,” he said.

“I come, not to terrify you, but to bolster you. We are, by rights, the dominant high school – and town – in this region, but does that mean that Tennessee recognizes us? No. They do not. They recognize Carthage, despicable, cesspool, Carthage as the place to be. When the government planned out the route for Interstate 40, did they put Rome on the exit signs? No. They put Carthage.” He leaned forward on the podium. “May I remind you: Carthage does not even have a sewage system. Rome. Does. Rome has a sewage system that is the envy of every township in this county.”

By this point, the students were starting to take their seats. (Except for the unconscious girl, who was laying out in the aisle.) They recognized Olds for what he was: A strong authority figure who, obviously, knew what he was talking about. The teachers, however, were looking on with massive amounts of suspicion. Mr. Dale, for his part, was looking for a quick exit.

“There is a time for diplomacy, and there is a time for war. We have done all that we can to raise our stature in this state. We have passed ordinances that opened our city to liquor, so that chain restaurants would come here, and, with them, people on the road and their sweet, precious money. But did they? No. They went to Carthage, who passed ordinances after we did. I say to you: Was this just? Was this an act of respect? It was not.

“I say to you, Rome is about to embark on its path to glory. I have already broached this subject to your parents in a town hall meeting – much like what we are experiencing now – last night. And they agreed with me. Moreover, Lieutenant Wilkinson agrees with me. And with him come the Battalion of the Holy, that honorable martial institution that resides in the cement bunker fifteen miles southeast of here.

“Young Romans, I have called you here today to tell you one thing and one thing alone: If Rome is to reach its rightful place alongside the thriving metropolises like Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and, yes, that den of decadence, Nashville, then Carthage must be destroyed. What say you?”

*

The answer was apparent to the entire Southeastern region the next week. The Roman Legion, led by he who now styled himself Legate Wilkinson, had made camp on the hills surrounding Carthage. Their numbers surprised everyone. Thousands of people had joined the Legion, spearheaded by Olds and the Legate, and marched down Highway 70. They bowed their heads to no one, and stopped for no traffic. Oh, yes, the highway patrol may have initially tried to put a halt to what they thought was some sort of political march, but soon after several officers were held captive, put in chains, and used to pull the Mayor’s chariot – for he’d had a chariot fashioned in RHS’s workshop – the rest of the county’s Sherriff office fell in line.

It was an unseasonably chilly morning when the artillery began its bombardment of the city. Explosions rocked the Carthage valley. The fire department was the first to go up in flames, followed shortly by the entire business district – which was the target of the assault. (“Their heart is commerce, and we shall pierce it with Roman steel,” Legate Wilkinson had said.) The Roman scouts – members of RHS’s 4H Club – had taken up positions around the city and reported in that the business district was a smoldering Hell.

The artillery then switched targets to the residential areas. The trailer parks were the first to go – easy targets due to the flashing of the metal exteriors in the sun. After the bombardment, the infantry was sent in, with the cavalry (the many heavy-duty pickup trucks from Rome) moving in from the flanks.

Within hours of the initial bombardment, it is estimated that 85% of Carthage had been neutralized. The remaining population was taken into custody of the Legion and given a choice: Serve Rome, or perish. Unsurprisingly, they overwhelmingly chose to serve Rome.

The news spread. Networks told of a psychotic megalomaniac who had leveled an entire town and poured salt on its ashes. When cornered for an interview by the local NBC affiliate, Olds, wearing his purple cloak and brass epaulettes over his white suit, laughed. “Salt? No, that’s absurd. I sowed the ground with lye.” His face grew serious and his attention switched from the reporter directly to the camera. “Rome is the light in the darkness of Tennessee. You have seen what we were able to do to our ancient enemy, the detested, unlamented Carthage. Heed our warning: Cross us not, and you shall be counted a friend in the eyes of Romans everywhere.”

The video of the interview was cut short to static and then, shortly after, to a bewildered anchor on set.

The Federal government had no idea how to treat this. Rome had not declared sovereignty, and even if they had, the Legion was holed up in the hills. The National Guard could have tried to root them out, but, for God’s sake, they had artillery!

The response from the state legislature was even more impotent. The governor, when pressed for some legislation, some action to put a stop to the madness, insisted that the State Congress pass a bill banning any and all discussion of MTV, on the grounds that it led to “impure thoughts.” The bill was promptly shot down.

Meanwhile, as Washington contributed a token show of defense to municipalities surrounding Smith County, Rome made its move. Convinced of their right to sovereignty over the region, they marched on the town of Cookeville. The battle there was akin to a strong breeze pushing over a tower of cards. Rome had only to announce its presence and the leadership of the city dissolved the town council and appointed Olds its head of government.

Olds immediately initiated a draft of every able-bodied man and woman into the Legion. The elders of the town (every man over fifty) were allowed citizenship in the Roman Imperium of Tennessee on the condition that they swear to serve Olds and the Imperium. Faced with execution via firing squad, they agreed, and Rome grew.

*

It was most surprising that, as Rome annexed municipalities, the general welfare of the region increased. While many towns had as much as a quarter of their population on the poverty line, Rome’s influence encouraged commerce and industry, by way of making up for low taxes by taking tribute from surrounding areas. For example, Cookeville had a poverty rate of 23% before the annexation. After the fact, it went down to 5%, mainly due to the draft of individuals into the Legion, and the employment of individuals in patrolling the roads.

When the statistics first hit the news, media agencies joked with the governor that he should take some tips from Olds. The governor took it seriously and promised to introduce legislation. The result of that was the quickly dead-in-the-water “No More Saggy Trousers” bill.

Within five months of Olds declaring, “Carthage must be destroyed” to a group of impressionable teenagers, the Imperium was made up of the counties of Smith, De Kalb, White, Cumberland, Van Buren, Warren, Putnam, Cannon, Macon, Trousdale, Fentress, Pickett, Overton, Clay, Jackson, Bledsoe, and half of Wilson county. Its square mileage had leapt from three square miles to over six thousand. Rome has refused to disclose its population to media outlets, saying only, “Our economy is the envy of the state, and none dare oppose us.”

On that, he is right. The Federal government has, over the past two weeks, met with Olds and the Legate to hash out an end to the Imperium’s hostilities to the surrounding area.

On Thursday, June 6, it was announced that, in exchange for cessation of war, the Roman Imperium would receive statehood.

Its motto: “Carthago delenda est.”

Vault-Tec

From: Don Langley
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 8:45 AM
To: _EVERYONE
Subject: Their ‘Oak Ridge’ Could Have Been Ours

ON THIS DAY

On March 28, 1979, America’s worst commercial nuclear accident occurred inside the Unit Two reactor at the Three Mile Island plant near Middletown, Pa.

Consider, for a minute, please, what you should do if a news flash announced a ‘significant’ radiation spill in the Cumberland River of a magnitude endangering human life .  .  .

 

.  .  . please do not lull yourself into thinking that we in Nashville need not be prepared to react intelligently to a radiation threat.

…don

Don Langley

Safety Czar

 

From: Aaron Simon
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 8:53 AM
To: Don Langley
Subject: RE: Their ‘Oak Ridge’ Could Have Been Ours

Don,

Thank you so much for bringing this to people’s attention. I often wonder about the threat of every nuclear facility in the state exploding simultaneously—for reasons varying from terrorism to Ragnarok—and it’s great to see that someone else shares my concern.

I think you’ll be interested in knowing that I’ve been rather proactive in my concerns about this threat. I have taken the initiative and found a company—very hush hush, so you’ll excuse me if I omit their name for the moment—that is preparing an initiative to protect a significant percentage of the American populace from the threat of a nuclear holocaust.

Think of the bomb shelters in the 1950s, except at a much larger scale. The “Vaults,” as they are called, are built to withstand thermonuclear blasts that are far, far greater than those that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki—not to mention they are being built into the sides of geographic features like mountains and canyons.

If you’d like, I can give you more information, but you must swear to keep it on the down-low, okay? There’s only so many slots open, and the screening process is quite thorough.

Quite. Thorough.

Aaron Simon

 

From: Don Langley
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 9:00 AM
To: Aaron Simon
Subject: RE: RE: Their ‘Oak Ridge’ Could Have Been Ours

AARON

Good to hear another person has the same thinking ive already gottenemaisl from people who think im overreacting to something that hasn’t happened in ages and wont again but I just said LOOK WHAT HAPPENED IN JAPAN!!!!!

Whats the name of this company Im sure interested….

 

You said that the screening is thorough……. What does that mean? My wife is interested too

Best,

Don Langley

Safety Czar

 

From: Aaron Simon
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 9:12 AM
To: Don Langley
Subject: RE: RE: RE: Their ‘Oak Ridge’ Could Have Been Ours

The company is called Vault-Tec. Don’t bother running a search online for them; you’ll only get results from some childish game that took inspiration from their efforts.

They’re a group of people who have the best interests of humanity at heart, hence the thorough screening process.  The philosophy behind the way they operate has been criticized as “nearly eugenics,” though that is little more than hate- and fear-mongering by those too short-sighted to acknowledge that the way the world operates is a one-way track to destruction.

The screening involves a complete genetic analysis, psychological profile, and several tests of your willingness to engage in martial combat.

On a somewhat ironic note: Do you recall in earlier in this e-mail, when I mentioned a video game? Well, Vault-Tec, displaying great magnanimity,  has, rather than sued the makers of the game, arranged for the games to be used as part of their screening process.

I have to go take care of a few things, but if you have any more questions, please let me know.

Aaron Simon

Enrollment Guy

 

From: Don Langley
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 9:30 AM
To: Aaron Simon
Subject: RE: RE: RE: RE: Their ‘Oak Ridge’ Could Have Been Ours

You are darn tootin Im interested!!! Don’t know about playing a vddeio game to get into it though… that seems just a BIT WEIRD but if that’s what the man wants. That’s what he gets………

Get back to me when your’e back. I need to know who to contact!

Don Langley

Safety Czar

 

From: Aaron Simon
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 1:08 PM
To: Don Langley
Subject: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Their ‘Oak Ridge’ Could Have Been Ours

Hi Don,

It so happens that the way they’ve got their organization set up is that interested parties contact proxies. It’s kind of like how you don’t go up to a Masonic Lodge and be like, “I’m a Mason now.” You know someone who’s a Mason, then they ease you in.

Same thing.

Lucky for you, Don, I am your proxy. I’ve already got a few things lined up in terms of getting your foot in the door. All I need you to do is run a couple of the simulation/appraisal sections of the game, and then we’ll ship off the data and see if you meet the cut.

Don’t worry: If you’re in, they’ll write your wife in as well.

Enrollment Guy

 

From: Don Langley
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 1:14 PM
To: Aaron Simon
Subject: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Their ‘Oak Ridge’ Could Have Been Ours

Great!!

What do I need to do?

Don Langley

Safety Czar

 

From: Aaron Simon
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 1:16 PM
To: Don Langley
Subject: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Their ‘Oak Ridge’ Could Have Been Ours

I’ll bring in my console tomorrow, hook it up in your office, and show you what to do.

Good luck!

 

Aaron Simon

Enrollment Guy

 

From: Aaron Simon
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 1:30 PM
To: Chris Flynn
Subject: VICTORY IS MINE!

Dude! You remember me telling you about that part in Old World Blues I couldn’t get past? The part with the Robot Radscorpions and when you have to deal with the Doctor?

Anyway, I got some rube at my office to beat it for me! He thinks there’s an actual Vault-Tec and he’s doing this to get a place in one of the Vaults in case of a nuclear explosion!

Aaaaahahahahahah!

 

From: Chris Flynn
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 1:35 PM
To: Aaron Simon
Subject: RE: VICTORY IS MINE!

You are a sad little man.