News You Do Not Need
This is your News You do not Need podcast So, you know how the internet will give you the exact thing you never needed to know, right when your brain was finally calm? That’s how I ended up learning about the world’s most aggressively pointless news story of the day: a small-town council meeting derailed by a single escaped emotional support duck. This was a real council meeting. Serious stuff on the agenda. Zoning. Budgets. Potholes. Democracy in beige. Everyone’s doing their best “I care about municipal drainage” face, when the back door swings open and in waddles chaos in a feathery tuxedo. The duck, whose actual legal name is Mister Quackers, belongs to a resident who apparently brings him everywhere as an emotional support animal. Most people bring a dog. Maybe a cat. This person looked at a pond and thought, “Therapy. But louder.” Mister Quackers does not make a quiet entrance. He storms in, quacking like he’s filibustering. Someone is at the microphone saying, “We need to address traffic congestion,” and the duck is in the aisle going, “QUACK,” which, to be fair, might be the most honest thing anyone said at that meeting. Naturally, the live stream is running, because government transparency. So now you’ve got this official camera angle that was meant for sober civic engagement, and instead you’re watching a council member trying to maintain eye contact with a spreadsheet while a duck is menacing their shoelaces. One councilor tries to keep going, reading from a report like, “The proposed amendment to section 4B…” and then Mister Quackers just lets out this extended quack that sounds exactly like he’s voting no. Honestly, if more public hearings had waterfowl commentary, I might actually tune in on purpose. Security shows up, which is a sentence I never expected to finish with “for a duck.” They attempt a gentle, diplomatic removal, and that duck says absolutely not. He dodges left, flaps right, slides under a folding chair. At one point he ends up on the little raised platform where the council sits, like he’s just been elected and no one got the memo. The owner finally rushes in, mortified, scoops up Mister Quackers, apologizing to the council, the audience, the internet, probably the concept of democracy. The chair of the meeting, trying to be professional, says, “Let the record reflect that the disruptive party has been removed from the chamber.” Which is a very polite way of saying, “We were briefly held hostage by a bird.” And that is how a town that desperately needed to talk about sidewalks instead spent fifteen minutes starring in a viral clip titled something like “Emotional Support Duck Crashes Government.” No crimes. No disasters. Just poultry-based policy interruption. You did not need to know any of this. Your life would have continued perfectly fine without the mental image of a duck being escorted out of a council chamber like a tiny, screaming lobbyist. But now it lives in your head, rent free, forever. Somewhere out there, a very serious set of official minutes now includes an unexplained gap where business was paused due to “avian interference,” and honestly, that might be the most relatable thing government has done in years. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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