If you call yourself an American, you need to know about a crucial issue
that is now confronting the U.S. Congress (motto: Remaining Firmly In
Office Since 1798). This is an issue that affects every American,
regardless of race or gender or religion or briefs or boxers; this is an
issue that is fundamental to the whole entire Cherished American Way of
Life. This issue is toilets.
Im talking about the toilets now being manufactured for home
use. They stink. Literally. You have to flush them two or three times
to get the job done. It has become very embarrassing to be a guest at a
party in a newer home, because if you need to use the toilet, you then
have to lurk in the bathroom for what seems (to you) like several
presidential administrations, flushing, checking, waiting, flushing,
checking, while the other guests are whispering: What is (your name)
DOING in there? The laundry?
I know this because I live in a home with three new toilets, and I
estimate that I spend 23 percent of my waking hours flushing them. This
is going on all over America, and its causing a serious loss in
national
productivity that could really hurt us as we try to compete in the
global
economy against nations such as Japan, where top commode scientists are
developing super-efficient, totally automated household models so
high-tech that they make the Space Shuttle look like a doorstop.
The weird thing is, the old American toilets flushed just fine. So why
did
we change? What force would cause an entire nation to do something so
stupid? Heres a hint: Its the same force that from time to time gets a
bee in its gigantic federal bonnet and decides to spend millions of
dollars on some scheme to convert us all to the metric system, or give
us
all Swine Flu shots, or outlaw tricycles, or whatever. You guessed it!
Our
government!
What happened was, in 1992, Congress passed the Energy Policy and
Conservation Act, which declared that, to save water, all U.S. consumer
toilets would henceforth use 1.6 gallons of water per flush. That is WAY
less water than was used by the older 3.5-gallon models the toilets
that made this nation great; the toilets that our Founding Fathers
fought
and died for which are now prohibited for new installations. The
public was not consulted about the toilet change, of course; the public
has
to go to work, so it never gets consulted about anything going on in
Washington.
But its the public that has been stuck with these new toilets, which
are
saving water by requiring everybody to flush them enough times to drain
Lake Erie on an hourly basis. The new toilets are so bad that there is
now
I am not making this up a black market in 3.5-gallon toilets.
People
are sneaking them into new homes, despite the fact that the Energy
Policy
and Conservation Act provides for I am not making this up, either
a
$2,500 fine for procuring and installing an illegal toilet.
I checked this out with my local plumber, who told me that people are
always asking him for 3.5-gallon toilets, but he refuses to provide
them,
because of the law. The irony is that I live in Miami; you can buy drugs
here simply by opening your front door and yelling: Hey! I need some
crack!
Heres another irony: The federal toilet law is administered by the U.S.
Department of Energy. According to a Washington Post article sent in by
many alert readers, the DOE recently had to close several mens rooms in
the Forrestall Building because I am STILL not making this up
overpressurized air in the plumbing lines was causing urinals to
explode.
Thats correct: These people are operating the Urinals of Death, and
theyre threatening to fine us if we procure working toilets.
The public and this is why I love this nation is not taking this
sitting down. There has been a grass-roots campaign, led by commode
activists, to change the toilet law, and a bill that would do that (H.R.
859 The Plumbing Standards Act) has been introduced in Congress by
Rep.
Joe Knollenberg of Michigan. I talked to Rep. Knollenbergs press
secretary, Frank Maisano, who told me that the public response has been
very positive. But the bill has two strikes against it:
- It makes sense.
- People want it.
These are huge liabilities in Washington. The toilet bill will probably
face lengthy hearings and organized opposition from paid
lobbyists; for all we know it will get linked to Whitewater and wind up
being investigated by up to four special prosecutors. So it may not be
passed in your lifetime. But I urge you to do what you can. Write to
your
congresshumans, and tell them you support Rep. Knollenbergs bill. While
youre at it, tell them youd like to see a constitutional amendment
stating that if any federal agency has so much spare time that its
regulating toilets, that agency will immediately be eliminated, and its
buildings will be used for some activity that has some measurable public
benefit, such as laser tag.
So come on, America! This is your chance to make a difference! Stand up
to
these morons! Join the movement!
Speaking of which, I have to go flush.