The White House faced embarrassment this week when their usual method of distracting the population with lesser problems backfired, leading them to unintentionally misdirect public attention back to the original problem. While the administration hoped to draw notice from earlier remarks misdirecting national awareness to the slave trade.

Popular theory is the White House misdirected media attention to the Middle Eastern slave trade to distract from the continuing aggression in “free” Iraq, and possibly some of the Nixon comparisons President Bush has endured over the course of the week; when Middle Eastern allies such as oil magnate/American investors Saudi Arabia took offense at the promise of sanctions, the White House sought to avert public outcry against the ally by launching a new attack—this one, accidentally, drawing notice back to the failing economy and bleak financial prospects for most Americans.

“It’s a shame in this country that men and women can work all their lives and having nothing to show for it,” said Condoleezza Rice, as a few aides standing by gave each other quizzical looks. “Especially in America, a country recognized world wide for having so much prosperity. And yet, we’re losing quality jobs everywhere but the service industry. The president is most definitely angered by this, and is sorry he’s passed so many economic policies to keep it in place.”

Failing to recognize that the disparate situations between the rich and poor in the United States was the same initial social ill so many wars were started to draw attention away from, Rice continued to assault the very structure of American finance.

“America continues to make advances in industry, medicine, and of course, commerce—advantages only a handful of Americans will fully experience, since the system is built to allow only partial upward mobility, preserving a luxury status for a privileged few, who triple their earnings by sending skilled jobs overseas and cutting the bottom out from the working classes.”

Concluded Rice: “That seems to me a much more devastating problem affecting this nation than the 800,000 slaves reportedly trafficked through the fine countries of our allies, right?”

It was a classic clusterfuck as only this administration could manage, doing potential damage to four and a half years worth of social reform rollback and securing the position of the upper classes. Realizing their mistake the Saturday after the statement was made, the White House had little choice but to keep the misdirection rolling.

“The War on Terror is at its worst,” said Press Secretary Scott McClellan, rushing into the press room Saturday morning, while most of the reporters were still pretty hung over for a long night’s/morning’s drinking. “We have elevated the terror level to ‘fantastic,’ which is uh… pretty bad. We’ve heard rumblings throughout the Middle East that Al Qaeda may be preparing for another strike on U.S. soil. And if intelligence hasn’t picked up anything on that yet, they most certainly will within the next few hours.”

Though the War on Terror is a subject that hasn’t unified Americans with the same strength it originally did in late 2001, it seemed like the safest place to leave public scrutiny until everything had blown over, or at least until the next major summer blockbuster got everybody talking about Batman or alien monsters or something again.

the commune news loves a little misdirection, or actually Ms. Directions, the cutie centerfold in our latest edition of Playboy Atlas. White House correspondent Lil Duncan was so close to being that centerfold. Damn shame.
13-Year-Old Goes First in National Spelling Draft
Mordecai “Three-Finger” Brown

America to Close Domestic Military Bases, Open Foreign
Lil Duncan

Indiana Offers Killer’s Sister Liver with Onions
Ramon Nootles

Motherfucker Arrested for Swearing
Ramon Nootles