Thursday night at the Republican National Convention, Clint
Eastwood amused delegates with his 11 minute conversation with a chair
representing an imaginary president Barak Obama, but some members of the GOP
are expressing outrage over doubts about the chair’s origins.
“I have it on good authority that that chair wasn’t made in
America,” says Nathan Blunt, a lawyer with the Conservative Preservation
Society (CPS). “That chair represents our president and our
country even if it’s only in the disjointed, rambling, and scatological conversation
between an angry old man and an imaginary person. We deserve to know where that
chair comes from. “
Blunt and the CPS have demanded a full and accurate account
of the chair’s origins. “If that chair was made in America, then why won’t Mr.
Eastwood tell us where he got it? We demand to know the truth.”
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