The Bush administration, eager to sell the country on "personal" Social Security accounts, cannot be all that pleased to see Kenny Boy again.
And maybe we can get some good out of this whole situation, in that there's no better example than "Kenny Boy" than cash-and-carry government.
Hasn't he extracted so far $4.7 billion for the beleaguered shareholders of Enron, the company once run by President Bush's old friend "Kenny Boy?"
But lately, they began putting brown paper bags over their heads when they visited so no one would notice them hobnobbing with Kenny Boy.
"Kenny Boy" was thanked for gifts, and teased about his age, in notes that closed with "Your friend, George."
Do it for Kenny Boy.
His son, the current president, nicknamed him "Kenny Boy."
The 180-degree turn from "Kenny Boy" to "Book Kenny" is going to be tricky.
Like $6,000 shower curtains and the nickname Kenny Boy, the corporate jet lives large in the public imagination.
Lay, affectionately nicknamed "Kenny Boy" by Bush, was never shy about public displays of friendship.