Monday, March 3, 2008

The Smart Ass Creed

    As many of you know, I enjoy reading (when it's not forced down my gullet and regurgitated by mandate into essay form). I was excited when Murfreesboro got a Barnes and Noble because it finally gave us a reliable outlet of literature and it gave me an outlet for approximately $100 in gift cards.

    Also, a brief side note before I go on, I have not abandoned Da Vinny Code. However, it is long and complex and tricky for me as I have never read The Da Vinci Code (which, in retrospect, I ought to have bought tonight... or borrowed from my dad... or borrowed it from my local library). But since I decided to write shorter posts more frequently, I figured you would be able to make do.

    Now, as everyone who ever heard of me knows, I'm a smart ass. Always have been, always will be. I'm all for punchy, succinct remarks (which further enhances the irony of my long winded blogs). However, there is a standard for smart assery and I will not tolerate sub-standard sarcasm. What do you get when you take the "smart" out of "smart ass"?

    Precisely. You get a sociopath.

    Now, you, the confused reader, are wondering what in blazes this had to do with anything. So far I've been all over the place with no real unifying theme or purpose.

    Well let me tie everything into a nice little bow of hatred.

    They had a section of employee recommended books and on the top shelf was seated America the Book by Jon Stewart back when Jon Stewart was funny. What drew my ire was the card the employee filled out to tell the consumer why they ought to buy the book. This card read:

    "This is the funniest book written about American Goverment since The Wealth of Nations."

    The joke being that a serious essay is actually quite silly. Now why did this attempt at humor draw my ire so much that I bothered to remember it verbatim?

    It violates the tenets of The Smart Ass Creed.

    The tenets of this secret society of smart asses are as follows:

    1. Everything is mockable, nothing is perfect.
    2. Never mock anything lower than yourself.
    3. Always be right
    Easily, the most important tenet is the last one as that is the underlying strength of all things smart ass. The comment card was troubling on three accounts:

    • First, The Wealth of Nations pre-dates any sort of organized American government as it was published a solid four months before the Declaration of Independence was signed. I suppose Adam Smith could have the type of clairvoyant space mind powers to write a ringing endorsement of a government that would not take any organized form for another 11 years. Perhaps he was a time traveler. However, barring my fantastic explanations, it falls short on that account.
    • Second, The Wealth of Nations has nothing to do with any government working. It is an economic essay which founded capitalism. So the comparison isn't even apt on the most basic level.
    • Third, it uses standard Family Guy lame jokery wherein you say "this is the best something since some vaguely pertinent pop culture reference". That offense is in violation of all I hold dear.
    • Fourth, I think the point the employee was trying to get at is "Capitalism is a joke", but that rings hollow as they work at a Barnes and Noble, which started the Starbucks trend. Between the combined might of frappuccinos and literature, they have crushed thousands of small businesses (which, in retrospect, should not have been built to be so easily crushed). Apparently, for the all the foolishness of the free market, this employee has no qualms cashing a paycheck from the corporate empires.
    The point I'm laboriously striding towards is many smart ass wannabes are just sociopaths who have no other way to validate their existence aside from embracing counter-culture for no other reason than to embrace it.

    As a genuine smart ass, it saddens me to see the art of sarcasm abused so.

    P.S. The other books on the top shelf of the recommended list were The Golden Compass and The God Delusion. So it seems as though the unifying theme amongst Barnes and Noble is "Screw you, popular opinion of local residents who are the lifeblood of our industry and, indeed, the very source of the income I so cherish!"

    P.P.S. This post weighs in at over 750 words, which is not terribly more succinct than Da Vinny Code.

    P.P.P.S. Also, in less than a month, the English Muffin Power Hour has produced more content in terms of volume of posts and length of material than the One Blog to Rule Them All did in 9 months. And yet, I don't have nearly as many comments.

          6 comments:

          Anonymous said...

          Irony is a great way to start the day. It gives you a nice warm feeling inside that makes you feel smart for getting a joke. :)

          Bean said...

          You haven't heard about Adam Smith's clairvoyant space mind? He also predected the Giants to win the Super Bowl this year.

          Anonymous said...

          You're good at writing. Good read up, I'd say.

          I was reading your post while I had a hangover this morning. I mean no offense and this is purely coincidental, but after reading your post I immediately threw up. I guess my weak body couldn't take your swift punch of wit.

          Anonymous said...

          Not only am I clairvoyant, I am reading your blog, while in the year 2135, and editing material that has already happen, still with no ripping of the time-space continuum fabric! Hah!

          Hunter Barry said...

          Adam Smith! Now is not the time to show off your clairvoyant space mind powers! It undermines my entire blog. Back to the fifth dimension with you!

          Anonymous said...

          But I am Adam Smith! You have no control over me! I wrote the most long winded treatise on the invisible hand of capitalism! How dare you! Continue to taunt me, and it will be to the fifth dimension with you!