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Tommy Maaltman Blogging

Tommy Maaltman Blogging
Tommy Maaltman Blogging

Sunday, December 24, 2017

Introducing Dr. Graham.

In the year of our Lord Jesus Christ on April 13, 1840, Alastair MacQualter Graham was born with an 18 carat gold spoon shoved down his pie hole to two narcissistic, wealthy, blue blooded Bostonian Yankees who could not have cared less. Everybody assumed the young lad would follow family tradition and enter the idle, corrupt, conniving and swindling profession of banking. Allistair's father was surprised to learn that his lazy seed wanted to be a surgeon! Most surgeons like barbers were itenerent low lifes not held with much regard by those in high society. The boy neglected his studies and spent his youth capturing and dissecting animals for fun. Later he would bury the carcass only to dig it up months later to examine the maggot, cleansed of flesh, bones. Keeping in line with his life's philosophy of doing as little as possible with minimal effort, Alastair applied to the new Homeopathic Medical School at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor only to be quickly and soundly rejected due to "poor academic preparation, lack of ambition and fortitude and questionable moral character." Hoping to be rid of his son, the elder Graham, quickly endowed a chair at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts and to nobody's surprise, Alistair was granted admission and ultimately graduated at the bottom of his class in 1861. That year in April, the Confederacy, threatened by the Northern state's bully posturing, attacked Fort Sumpter and the Great American War of Northern Aggression was off and running. Alistair Mac Qualter Graham, M.D. having failed at multiple attempts to establish a private surgical practice due to his fondness for adult beverages, decided to enlist in the Army as an hired saw. Thinking it wouldn't be too bad to own some slaves to help out a bit it seemed logical to hitch up with the Army of Northern Virginia under the command of General Robert E. Lee despite the fact that he had nothing in common with the South other than his new belief in slavery. So began the career of Alistair MacQualter Graham, M.D., budding young Army hack with a soon to be abundance of hapless severely injured young patients. Fortunately, despite the multitude of snake eyed, theiving, self taught ambulance chasing attorneys, medical malpractice was not the problem it would later become. Most patients succumbed to medical mistakes and were simply buried in shallow graves and forgotten. In addition, Army surgeons lived from pay check to pay check drinking away most of their money and never accumulated assets making any legal action moot. A medical degree, a budding practice, a lot of down time between battles and an abundance of American whiskey, Scotch whisky and rye. What was not to like? Had Dr. Graham found Heaven on Earth? Feeling good about himself and his new found interest in slavery, Alastair poured himself a dram of Double Black Johnny Walker 40% alcohol, 80 proof whisky with a peaty nose and coal smoldering smoke with spice back ground. Kicking back, Alistair savored the burn and waited for the issuing of his darkies. SlĂ inte, Tommy Maaltman.

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