Citing a moral obligation to use all quasi-legal means at his disposal to protect the sanctity of heterosexual marriage against any and all potential dangers, President Bush used his State of the Union address last Tuesday to call for a preemptive strike against the future threat of gay marriage. In the speech, Bush suggested that since the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled last year that a ban on same-sex marriages was in clear violation of the US Constitution, the clear answer was to amend the Constitution and take out the part where fags can get married.
Conservatives, still upset about the 1967 Supreme Court decision that struck down state laws banning interracial marriages, applauded Bush’s medicine ball-sized cajones. Meanwhile, all remaining Democratic candidates whiffed at the issue completely, knocking over the T-ball stand. Off the record, however, one candidate whose name rhymes with “you thin bitch” pointed out that despite his grave concern for the state of this sacred institution, Bush made no mention of other, more widespread threats to the sanctity of marriage, including spousal abuse, astronomical divorce rates and Britney Spears.
“I’ve taken it upon myself the responsibility to halt the crusading of activist judges who, I might remind you, were not elected,” Bush paused for a moment during the speech for his point to sink in. The effect was not what the president had probably intended, however, since none of the assembled reporters were sure if by this he meant that judges weren’t reflecting the will of the people, or if Bush was attempting to appear smarter by comparing himself to a judge, since he wasn’t elected either.
“I think we might have to have a look here at that Constitution,” Bush commented wryly, staring down his nose through an imaginary pair of glasses. “And make sure the founding fathers didn’t sneak any other unpatriotic bits into the fine print.”
When asked later if he thought the American people should vote on the contents of the Constitution every year, to prevent the document from ever conflicting with contemporary mores, whims or prejudices, President Bush pretended a large bug had flown into his ear and he couldn’t hear nothing.
Vice President Dick Cheney, put in the hilariously ironic pickle of having to support an Anti-Gay president while not appearing to squeeze one on his lesbian daughter Mary, chose his words carefully. “Uuh… gay is good. Unless you think it isn’t. But I’m not touching that with a ten-foot pole. All people should be treated with respect and dignity. But we also shouldn’t allow the fine institution of marriage to be sullied. Not that gay people are dirty. Can I go now?”
“All people are equal in God’s sight,” Bush announced charitably. “But let this be an example to the unpatriotic peoples in Europe and elsewhere who say the United States thinks it is God. We know where to draw the line on who gets to go heavily into debt while bowing to social convention, even if God doesn’t.”
Before being wrestled into a van by his handlers, Bush made vague mention of a proposed CIA program to weed out gay moles inside traditional marriages. While it is not clear how highly this threat to national insecurity ranks on the President’s to-do list, most observers conclude it is likely nestled comfortable in-between “catch Saddama bin Laden” and “watch Ultimate Fighting Championship.”