Occupy Wall St. got a much needed boost today when
international enigma and self-styled “extroverted recluse” David Wesley burst
onto the scene to offer words of wisdom to the fight weary crowd. The people coalesced quickly around the
femme-aficionado as he serenaded the protesters with inspiration belted from a horn
carved from a rhinoceros he rescued from African poachers in his “Safari Period”
that later died of old age.
Not one to hold back, Wesley implored the women in the crowd
to “break free of your bindings, and remove your brassieres!”. His suggestion was met with a blizzard of
bras thrown from all directions, and a wave of freedom washing over the
protestors as the chains of oppression were broken. It was at this point that he was lifted,
seemingly miraculously, to the height of two men and walked stridently towards
the façade of Goldman Sach’s headquarters.
With a swift and confident blow he lashed forth one clenched fist and
with a thunderous boom, put a crack in the foundation of the building, rattling
the occupants and thrilling the protestors.
He turned around and faced the crowd and asked them to “Roar like
thunder for freedom!” and with that the
crowd began to rumble out a groaning yell that shook the ground of downtown
NYC. Behind him the crack he made with
his furious punch started to grow and snake its way up the side of the
building, faster as it got higher, until it reached the top and split the
building in half. With a sound matched
only by the crowd’s roar, the building began to fall behind him enveloping Wesley
and the stunned protestors in grey dust.
When the cloud settled, the quiet shock was pierced with a
thunderous cheer as Wesley emerged unscathed, one
foot on the pile of bricks, and another on the neck of Lloyd Blankfein, who could
be heard impishly declaring “…whatever you want Wesley!...YOU WIN!”
It was a few hours before anyone realized he was gone, on to
another town’s protest, on to another win.
He filled his limo with a few bra-less ladies, some fried chicken and
beer. And I was there, as always, his
confidant and biographer…glad to bear witness to the man
of our generation.
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