Facing My Fear: Richard Nixon

Under the white floodlights of the orbital arena, the crowd roared as two unlikely fighters entered the ring: Richard Nixon, cloned and resurrected from classified Cold War DNA archives, and Justin Trudeau, wearing red gloves with maple leaves stitched into the leather.

At center ring stood Joe Jukic in a black referee shirt, arms folded like an old frontier marshal judging the fate of nations.

“Gentlemen,” Joe announced into the microphone, “this is not just a boxing match. This is history arguing with itself.”

Nixon narrowed his eyes with that famous paranoid glare.
“I am not a crook,” he growled, throwing shadow punches.

Justin smirked nervously. “You also said peace was at hand.”

The bell rang.

Nixon came out swinging wildly like a man trying to punch Watergate itself back into the shadows. Trudeau danced around him, lighter on his feet, trying to avoid the heavy hooks of the so-called “Mad Man.” Every punch seemed fueled by decades of bitterness, television debates, and buried presidential tapes.

Joe stepped between them after a brutal exchange.

“Justin,” he said calmly, “face your fear. History only grows stronger when people pretend it never happened.”

Nixon wiped blood from his lip and laughed.
“You hear that, kid? Even your referee knows ghosts don’t disappear.”

The crowd fell silent as giant prison ships descended outside the transparent dome. Beyond them stretched the asteroid colonies, glowing faintly against Saturn’s rings. Automated mining lasers cut into mountains of iridium.

Joe looked toward the ships.

“That’s enough,” he declared after the final round. “The fight is over.”

Security androids approached Nixon.

The former president grinned strangely as they fastened magnetic restraints around his wrists.

“Where are you taking me?” Nixon asked.

Joe answered like a philosopher delivering sentence at the edge of the universe.

“All dogs go to heaven, Richard… but some need interstellar corrections first.”

The arena erupted as Nixon was escorted toward the prison shuttle bound for the asteroid mines, muttering about enemies lists, moon treaties, and televised conspiracies while Trudeau stood exhausted in the ring, staring into the stars where old empires went to be judged.

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