A Thought To Ponder Once More...

Apr 12, 2009 09:15

In 2004, I posted an article on Easter Thursday detailing the plans that a friend and I had in place to, erm, 'celebrate' the holiday. Here it is, posted on Easter in its entirety for the sixth time annually.

Amidst all the celebratory Easter gunfire and the ritualistic consumption by tiny children of outrageous amounts of sugar and other confections, I have noticed a disturbing image. While the religious implications of Easter are undeniable and profound, the main point for even some semi-religious people has become bunnies, eggs, and ducklings. This, however, should be deemed common knowledge, and as such will be discussed no further.

The point that I am making is much more chilling. I have discovered a hidden meaning to the Easter holiday.

The whole connection between Lent and Easter is mainly dietary, obviously...I mean, probably three quarters of people give up some kind of food for Lent. However, on Easter they eat heartily of all those naughty food-stuffs like chocolate and malt balls.

Which brings me to the main topic. For I have determined, after much study and deliberation (in other words, it hit me as I was sitting here performing this delicious yet despicable act myself), that Easter, apart from serving as an annual Christian milestone, is solely devoted to the promotion of rabbit eating.

Yes, you heard me right. While I have no qualms about shooting a rabbit in rabbit season and eating it, the look on those toddlers faces as they, in one fell swoop, take the head clear off of their 24-pound chocolate bunny is simply bone-chilling. Frankly, I can't believe I never noticed this before. It's as if the Pagan tradition of rabbits and the Catholic symbolism of the end of Lent have culminated in some sort of strange twilight zone in which rabbits are brutalized (out of season, I might add) by the very people that love beauty and innocence...much like they love their mommies.

I believe that I will be setting up a task force to find all of the surviving chocolate rabbits, and save them from this most horrible fate by setting them free in the wilderness, so we can kill them when they are legal.

I will be setting up this task force this week, with a sign up sheet in the cafeteria. Unlike most task forces, however, I only have room for about six people. We will collect as many chocolate rabbits that we can afford, and then film ourselves releasing them.

I might add that if they do not take to the wild easily, we will be sacrificing our dignity and eating them ourselves in the gentlest way possible, so as to protect them from the 'partial eating' torture so common among these pre-school killers.

With that, I leave you with no poem, because I am simply too tired to write one, but we can say that it's because I did such a good job on the preceding essay. Thank you.

-Chupes
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