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Surgeon
General Says Children Calling Shotgun Dangerously Early
by InkCreate's Christian
Rudder
Don't let
this happen to you.
Washington, D.C.
Calling it a "crisis among our nation's children," Surgeon
General Elmo Cooper said that America's youth are calling shotgun
far too early, and that he will lead a campaign to stem the trend.
Dr. Cooper hopes that the country will rally around the new slogan
"Just Don't Say Shotgun" and stop calling for the front
seat hours, even days, sooner than necessary. The campaign will
feature a series of dark, brooding ads showing young people who've
lost friends by calling shotgun too soon. In one compelling spot,
a young boy, stranded at the mall by his friends for calling shotgun
during the movie they had come to see, says, "Now what the
fuck am I gonna do?" as they drive off. He is then run over
by a truck, and, later in the ad, stray dogs tear apart his forgotten
corpse.
Dr. Cooper says that, medically speaking, "a premature call
is the exclaiming of 'shotgun' before any part of the vehicle is
in view," but he said that the definition will have to be revised
in light of troubling new data. To illustrate the problem, Dr. Cooper
brought several afflicted teens to speak to reporters. Said Billy
Gaynor, a hardened seventeen-year-old from Knoxville, "The
first thing I do every morning is call shotgun eight, maybe ten,
times. That gets me a few good rides. But I still can't beat the
people who set their alarms at like 4:00 A.M." Dr. Cooper warned
that while many youths, particularly young men like Mr. Gaynor,
glorify shotgun and think it is 'sweet', calling it too early can
have many dangerous side effects, including peer ridicule and rides
in the trunk. Studies have also suggested that early shotgun-calling
can lead children to prematurely blurt out other things, such as
semen, which can have serious consequences later in life.
Explaining the early calling rise, Dr. Cooper said, "Children
learn from their parents that riding shotgun is more spacious, so
naturally, they want to sit up front when they are old enough to
make seating decisions for themselves." Kids also face peer
pressure from older children, who make fun of and sometimes scoot
the seat back on children who don't ride shotgun. Dr. Cooper concedes
that this abuse is deserved, but he implores parents to hide that
fact from their kids: "Our children must not know that they're
bitches for riding in the back. That way we can always get the front."
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