Understanding “Presidents Day”

(Thanks to a commenter, Becky Sorensen, on FB for the kickoff to this post.)


A lady was eating lunch with her daughter and 10 year old grandson
last week when his mom asked him “What is tomorrow?”

He said “It’s President’s Day”

She asked “Do you know what that means?”.

He said “President’s Day is when Obama steps out of the White House
and if he sees his shadow we have 2 more years of unemployment and
stupidity.”

From the mouths of babes… But I’d almost prefer Presidents Day be viewed as a whack-a-mole game than as Groundhog Day, though… (I mean, after all, it honors the First Great American Tyrant as part of its purpose, as well as honoring the Father of Our Country. *heh* Playing whack-a-mole with the current occupant of the White House seems appropriate.)

😉

More?

The Makers vs. The Takers

Take away?

“The recent Bureau of Labor Statistics report citing systemic high
unemployment for the past two years shows that of the approximately
300 million Americans, only 47% of adults have full-time jobs. It’s a
mind-boggling statistic: 53%– or a majority — of American adults do
not work. The repercussions for our country are dire, despite the
White House proclaiming the recent Labor report as good news.”

Now, there are several classes among that 53%, and not all of them are
“takers” as the writer of the article posits (for but one example,
stay-at-home moms with a supportive and supportING husbands
), but enough of them are that the divide is stark.

2 Replies to “Understanding “Presidents Day””

  1. I think the kid had it right.

    Actually, I never cared for the idea of combining the celebration of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln into a single bank holiday.

    Every President’s birthday should be celebrated as a mandatory unpaid holiday for all members of Congress and the Bureaucracy. Of course some will happen on the same day – so in that case consecutive days should be chosen… at least until the total means every day of the calendar year.

    Private enterprise of course should be exempt.

    1. *heh* I like your Presidents Day idea… a lot! Of course, added to the current fedgov holidays, that’d only keep politicians *spit* and bureaucraps *gag-spew* out of our hair for fifty-some days/year. What to do about the other 190-odd workdays? How about “Presidents Weeks“?

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