In the United States, the phrases "turkeys voting for
Thanksgiving" (that being the holiday when turkey is more commonly served) and
Chickens for Colonel Sanders are often used. In Canada, the story of
Mouseland has mice voting for cats. A similar German idiom is "Only the most stupid calves would vote for their butchers" ("Nur die dümmsten Kälber wählen ihre Metzger selber").
Bertold Brecht alluded to it in his
Kälbermarsch ("March of the calves", 1933), a parody of the Nazi anthem "
Horst Wessel Song", which was included in his play
Schweik in the Second World War (1943). A similar photomontage of
John Heartfield shows Hitler as a butcher with a chicken and the caption "Don't panic! He's a vegetarian." In 2015,
Twitter user Adrian Bott posted the viral
tweet, I never thought leopards would eat face,' sobs woman who voted for the Leopards Eating People's Faces Party". The expression has since become idiomatic of people who face adverse consequences of authoritarian, cruel or unjust policies that they supported. A popular 2016
New Yorker cartoon by Paul Noth portrays a sheep viewing a billboard of a wolf political candidate whose campaign slogan is "I am going to eat you", and approvingly remarking "He tells it like it is." ==See also==