communities saw homes owned by whites burned, and minorities who lived in white middle-class communities saw their homes burned. A full-scale race war is boiling just under the surface, all it needed to explode and swallow the country were a few more speeches by the President, a man elected to unite the races, a man who did everything in his power to turn them against each other.
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The Speaker takes to the floor of the conference, saying, “Fellow Representatives, I’ve spoken to the General; he has many concerns. His largest concern is there is nothing in the constitution that enables us, the Congress to select a President. He said, and he’s correct we have to follow the chain of succession, as such he’s suggested the Senate vote him to become a cabinet officer which would then place him into the line of succession, and he would then agree to assume the position until new elections are held.”
The Representative from Harlem in New York City stands, “Mr. Speaker, fellow Representatives, I don’t think the General is the right person to hold our highest office, He is very pro-gun, he’s everything we’ve had before, he’s a military man, he’ll put us into new wars, and the biggest case against the General is how can we replace the first African American President with a white man?”
The Speaker responds, “Mr. Representative shouldn’t we be selecting the best person for the job?”
“We must select an African American so that our minority population will know we understand their plight.”
The Speaker looks confused, “What plight? Even the poorest American is richer than some of the rich in the rest of the world. We’ve provided enough government benefits payments so that our people on welfare can afford large screen televisions, three meals a day, heat, air conditioning, even free transportation. We supply them with free cell phones, high-speed internet access, healthcare paid for by the rest of the working people. And you say we don’t understand their plight? What plight?”
“Mr. Speaker, if we don’t show our African American population we’re considering their needs they will rise and take what they want.”
”Mr. Representative, what about the needs of the rest of the country? What about the needs of the other minorities? Do you only care about a single group of people? We’re supposed to represent all of the people.”
“Mr. Speaker I care about the people who elected me.”
“As you should, but not to the harm to the rest of the country.”
“Mr. Speaker do you think the people of the country will accept a military coup?”
“There won’t be a military coup; there will be a legal impeachment of elected officials who broke their oaths of office. Elected people who exceeded their authority. The Senate will vote and approve the General as the New Secretary of State who will then be line to become President, no coup, everything legal per the constitution.”
“Mr. Speaker, I’m telling you the African Community won’t accept him as their President.”
“Mr. Representative he’ll be the President of all of America, not just one group, or another. We need a leader to bring the country together; we need a unifier. Who if not the General would you propose?”
“Why not the Reverend Johnson?”
“Are you serious?”
“Yes, he ran for President before; he can unite all of the minorities, he can lead us into a new-social pack with the people who have been overlooked for so long.”
“The Reverend will cause mass uprising across the country. He won’t get the votes in the Senate. The General is our only choice to hold the country together. As far as if we can appoint a President, I had this looked into. The actual first President was appointed by Congress when the Declaration of Independence was signed; John Hancock was appointed by the delegates as the first President. Hence, Congress has
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